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I'm still not clear on this. Surely "Scrolls" cannot infringe on Bethesda's trademark "Elder Scrolls" any more than a film called lion would infringe on "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe". Surely Bethesda would need to have trademarked the two words independently to hold weight?

Also, I really don't see how suing an indie darling on such a shaky position is at all positive to their image?

I do see why they needed to block Mojang being granted the Scrolls Trademark themselves, in order to avoid problems in the future, but they surely don't need to defend a TM they presumably don't actually own?

I know that the law is 90% a shady, grey area but like Andrew I don't understand how the word scrolls infringes on a trademark "Elder Scrolls". Then again I got no knowledge of law or copyrighting and I guess Bethesda's lawyers must have some grounds to be able to take it to court.

I think the argument is either they have trademarked Scrolls as well as "Elder Scrolls" or that "Elder Scrolls" is such a well known brand that if a consumer saw a game simply called Scrolls they may confuse it with "Elder Scrolls".

Therefore the perceived size of the "Elder Scrolls" brand matters in this case as it would directly influence the perception of the consumer.

They dont really have a case, but they have deepr pockets. Chances are its a case of which team of solicitors are savvy and smart enough toncrush thebopposition, and there is also the path of apahy wherby dragging out. Case over years can result in closure of the opposition in both mind, body and " letter of the spurious laws"

Ok given that size argument, whilst the Elder scrolls as a series has a large following, it blew up at oblivion, and I know quite a few people who had never heard of the series prior to Oblivion, forget it's called Elder Scrolls IV oblivion, and have seen some people on forums say they were looking forward to Oblivion 5: Skyrim. On that basis, I would argue that a lot of fans wouldn't notice if Elder Scrolls wasn't on the box, as long asthey know it is the sequel to that game.

So how big really is the name "Elder Scrolls" if not every one who has played it knows that they did? Even with Morrowwind people generally only refer to the series when talking about more than one game in the series collectively.

So the size argument seems a bit stretched, although obviously that is not my call to make.
If they have Scrolls trademarked that is an issue, but if that is the case, then all reports I have seen have been misrepresented, as they all just refer to the Elder Scrolls trademark.

Off Topic a little here: I guess they didn't take him up on the offer of a Quake 3 Shootout tournament to decide the fate.

OT: I think this is similar to other recent lawsuits that seem trivial at best. If you own an IP you have to be seen to defend it in all cases of possible misuse otherwise in the future it can be used against you in court along the lines of "you didn't defend it then, why now?".